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Thomas Southerne

 
Irish Literature Companion: Thomas Southerne

Southern[e], Thomas (1660-1746), dramatist; born in Oxmanstown, near Dublin. While at TCD in 1676-80 he attended plays at Smock Alley Theatre. He presented his first play, The Loyal Brother, or the Persian Prince (1682), at Drury Lane. The Disappointment, or the Mother in Fashion (1684) was played at Smock Alley. Southerne received an army commission but his military career ended when James II lost the throne in 1688. He returned to the stage with Anthony Love, or The Rambling Lady (1690), the most ribald of his plays. His best-known works, The Fatal Marriage, or, Innocent Adultery (1694) and Oroonoko, (1695), were both tragedies based on novels by Aphra Behn. Later plays include The Spartan Dame (1719) and Many the Mistress (1726).

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Columbia Encyclopedia: Thomas Southerne
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Southerne, Thomas (sŭTH'ərn), 1660-1746, English dramatist, b. Ireland. Educated at Trinity College, Dublin, he moved to London where he pursued a career as a writer. He was a friend of Dryden and wrote prologues and epilogues for several of Dryden's plays. Southerne is chiefly remembered for his two sentimental tragedies, The Fatal Marriage (1694) and Oroonoko (1696), both based on novels by Aphra Behn.

Bibliography

See study by J. W. Dodds (1933, repr. 1970).

Wikipedia: Thomas Southerne
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Thomas Southerne (1660 – May 22, 1746), Irish dramatist, was born at Oxmantown, near Dublin, in 1660, and entered Trinity College, Dublin in 1676. Two years later he was entered at the Middle Temple, London.

His first play, The Persian Prince, or the Loyal Brother (1682), was based on a contemporary novel. The real interest of the play lay not in the plot, but in the political significance of the personages. Tachmas, the loyal brother, is obviously a flattering portrait of James II, and the villain Ismael is generally taken to represent Shaftesbury. The poet received an ensigns commission in Princess Annes regiment, and rapidly rose to the rank of captain, but his military career came to an end at the Revolution.

He then gave himself up entirely to dramatic writing. In 1692 he revised and completed Cleomenes for John Dryden; and two years later he scored a great success in the sentimental drama of The Fatal Marriage, or the Innocent Adultery (1694). The piece is based on Mrs Aphra Behn's The History of the Nun, with the addition of a comic underplot. It was frequently revived, and in 1757 was altered by David Garrick and produced at Drury Lane. It was known later as Isabella, or The Fatal Marriage. The general spirit of his comedies is well exemplified by a line from Sir Anthony Love (1691) every day a new mistress and a new quarrel. This comedy, in which the part of the heroine, disguised as Sir Anthony Love, was excellently played by Mrs Mountfort, was his best. He scored another conspicuous success in Oroonoko, or The Royal Slave (1696). For the plot of this he was again indebted to the novel by Aphra Behn.

In his later pieces he did not secure any great successes, but he contrived to gain better returns from his plays than Dryden did, and he remained a favorite with his contemporaries and with the next literary generation. He died on the 22nd of May 1746.

His other plays are: The Disappointment, or the Mother in Fashion (1684), founded in part on the Curioso Imperlinente in Don Quixote; The Wives Excuse, or Cuckolds make themselves (1692); The Maids Last Prayer; or Any rather than fail (1692); The Fate of Capua (1700); The Spartan Dame (1719), taken from Plutarch's Life of Aegis; and Money the Mistress (1729).

His work is collected as Plays written by Thomas Southerne, with an Account of the Life and Writings of the Author (1774).



 
 

 

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Irish Literature Companion. The Concise Oxford Companion to Irish Literature. Copyright © 1996, 2000, 2003 by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved.  Read more
Columbia Encyclopedia. The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright © 2003, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Columbia University Press. All rights reserved. www.cc.columbia.edu/cu/cup/ Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Thomas Southerne" Read more